- 1Cahill Center for Astronomy and Astrophysics, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, United States
- 2X-ray Astrophysics Laboratory, NASA Goddard Space Flight Center, Greenbelt, MD, United States
- 3Centre for Astrophysics Research, University of Hertfordshire, Hatfield, United Kingdom
- 4Institute of Astronomy, University of Cambridge, Cambridge, United Kingdom
- 5Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, Pasadena, CA, United States
- 6Center for Relativistic Astrophysics, School of Physics, Georgia Institute of Technology, Atlanta, GA, United States
- 7Kavli Institute for Particle Astrophysics and Cosmology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA, United States
- 8Dipartimento di Matematica e Fisica, Università Roma Tre, Rome, Italy
- 9Max-Planck-Institut für Extraterrestrische Physik (MPE), Garching, Germany
- 10Marshall Space Flight Center, Huntsville, AL, United States
- 11Science and Technology Institute, Universities Space Research Association, Huntsville, AL, United States
- 12Department of Astronomy, Yale University, New Haven, CT, United States
- 13Dr Karl Remeis-Observatory and Erlangen Centre for Astroparticle Physics, FAU Erlangen-Nürnberg, Bamberg, Germany
- 14UMR5277 Institut de Recherche en Astrophysique et Planétologie (IRAP), Toulouse, France
- 15INAF–Osservatorio Astrofisico di Arcetri, Firenze, Italy
- 16University of Manitoba, Department of Physics and Astronomy, Winnipeg, MB, Canada
- 17Canadian Institute for Theoretical Astrophysics, University of Toronto, Toronto, ON, Canada
- 18Quasar Science Resources SL for ESA, European Space Astronomy Centre, Science Operations Department, Madrid, Spain
- 19Department of Physics and Astronomy, Clemson University, Kinard Lab of Physics, Clemson, SC, United States
- 20ASI–Agenzia Spaziale Italiana, Rome, Italy
- 21Instituto de Estudios Astrofísicos, Facultad de Ingeniería y Ciencias, Universidad Diego Portales, Santiago, Chile
- 22Kavli Institute for Astronomy and Astrophysics, Peking University, Beijing, China
- 23Physics Department, Tor Vergata University of Rome, Rome, Italy
- 24INAF–Astronomical Observatory of Rome, Rome, Italy
- 25INFN–Rome Tor Vergata, Rome, Italy
- 26Department of Astronomy, University of Maryland, College Park, MD, United States
- 27Department of Physics, SUNY Brockport, Brockport, NY, United States
Constraining the primary growth channel of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) remains one the most actively debated questions in the context of cosmological structure formation. Owing to the expected connection between SMBH spin parameter evolution and the accretion and merger history of individual black holes, population spin measurements offer a rare observational window into the cosmic growth of SMBHs. As of today, the most common method for estimating SMBH spin relies on modeling the relativistically broaden atomic profiles in the reflection spectrum observed in X-rays. In this paper, we study the observational requirements needed to confidently distinguish between the primary SMBH growth channels based on their distinct spin-mass distributions predicted by the Horizon-AGN cosmological simulation. Indoing so, we characterize outstanding limitations associated with the existing measurements and discuss the landscape of future observational campaigns which could be planned and executed with future X-ray observatories. We focus our attention on the High-Energy X-ray Probe (HEX-P), a proposed probe-class mission designed to serve the high-energy community in the 2030s.
1 Introduction
As of today, the existence of supermassive black holes (SMBHs) residing in the nuclei of galaxies is no longer a subject of scientific dispute. With the presence of an SMBH clearly revealed in the orbital motion of stars in our Galactic center (e.g., Ghez et al., 2008; Genzel et al., 2010) and direct imaging of matter just outside the Event Horizon (Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration et al., 2019; Event Horizon Telescope Collaboration et al., 2022), the focus has now shifted towards understanding the origin and growth of these extreme astrophysical objects with masses above ≳ 106 M⊙. Decades of extragalactic observations have demonstrated a tight connection between the properties of SMBHs and their galactic hosts, now interpreted as black hole-galaxy co-evolution across cosmic time (see Kormendy and Ho, 2013, for a review). More specifically, SMBHs have been established as key players in shaping galaxy formation, structure and, most of all, in suppressing galactic star formation through a range of highly energetic processes collectively referred to as active galactic nucleus (AGN) feedback (e.g., McNamara et al., 2000; Bower et al., 2006; Terrazas et al., 2016; Henriques et al., 2019; Piotrowska et al., 2022).
Regardless of its exact mode of operation, AGN feedback relies on extracting power from the immediate surroundings of supermassive black holes via accretion. The amount of energy released in the process greatly exceeds the threshold required to offset cooling around galaxies or to unbind baryons within them, rendering SMBHs a formidable source of power capable of affecting their galactic hosts (see Fabian, 2012; Werner et al., 2019, for in-depth reviews). At high accretion rates (
Although abundant observational evidence exists for the impact of SMBHs on their surrounding galaxies, relatively little is known about their origins and growth across cosmic time. Understanding how these black holes form and reach their impressive masses is particularly important both in the context of galaxy evolution and recent James Webb Space Telescope (JWST, Gardner et al., 2023; Rigby et al., 2023) observations, which report black holes with masses MBH > 106 M⊙ as early as z = 10.6 (Harikane et al., 2023; Maiolino et al., 2023a; Maiolino et al., 2023b). Since cosmic growth via accretion of gas and SMBH-SMBH mergers occurs on timescales beyond direct human observation, one would, ideally, like to characterize SMBH growth histories using alternative observables. An example of such a proxy is black hole angular momentum,
As the black hole increases its mass via accretion of surrounding material, its spin changes owing to angular momentum transfer from the accretion flow. If the accreting material settles into a prograde2 disk, inflow of angular momentum aligned with that of the black hole leads to its efficient spin-up (Bardeen, 1970; Moderski and Sikora, 1996; Moderski et al., 1998). In contrast, chaotic accretion of matter with randomly oriented angular momentum decreases the spin magnitude, ultimately driving it towards a* ∼ 0 over sufficiently long times (e.g., Berti and Volonteri, 2008; King et al., 2008; Dotti et al., 2013). In the presence of magnetic fields, even in the case of ordered inflow through aligned accretion disks, spin can also be reduced by energy extraction via the Blandford-Znajek process (Blandford and Znajek, 1977). This jet launching mechanism has been shown to drain black hole angular momentum in magnetically arrested disks (MADs) in General-Relativistic magneto-hydrodynamical (GRMHD) simulations of SMBH accretion (e.g., Tchekhovskoy et al., 2011; McKinney et al., 2012; Tchekhovskoy et al., 2012; Narayan et al., 2022; Curd and Narayan, 2023; Lowell et al., 2023). Finally, mergers of SMBH binaries leave behind remnants which can be either spun up or down with respect to their progenitors, contingent on individual spin parameters upon coalescence (e.g., Kesden, 2008; Rezzolla et al., 2008; Tichy and Marronetti, 2008; Barausse and Rezzolla, 2009; Healy et al., 2014; Hofmann et al., 2016).
Depending on the relative contribution of these processes across cosmic time, one would expect different growth histories of SMBHs to leave an imprint on the measured spin parameter. In the cosmological context, this expectation was first explored in semi-analytic models (SAMs) - taking advantage of their low computational cost, several studies have now used SAMs to make spin population predictions for different SMBH accretion and coalescence scenarios. Berti and Volonteri (2008) demonstrated that prolonged episodes of coherent accretion produce SMBH populations spinning at near-maximal rates, while chaotic infall of matter and mergers force the dimensionless spin parameter towards a* ∼ 0. Dotti et al. (2013) generalized the chaotic accretion paradigm and found that SMBHs are not spun down efficiently when the distribution of accreted angular momenta is not isotropic, allowing black holes to maintain stable high spin values for even modest degrees of anisotropy. By linking the orientation of accreted angular momentum with that of the galactic host, Sesana et al. (2014) further showed that the spin parameter critically depends on the dynamics of the host and that SMBHs residing in spiral galaxies tend to spin fast, biasing the observable samples towards high a* values.
Moving beyond the idealized semi-analytic approach, spin parameter modelling in hydrodynamical cosmological simulations only recently became an area of active development (Dubois et al., 2014c; Fiacconi et al., 2018; Bustamante and Springel, 2019; Talbot et al., 2021; Talbot et al., 2022). As of today, there exist three major simulation suites which trace spin parameter in statistical samples of SMBHs: the NewHorizon cosmological simulation (Dubois et al., 2021), on-the-fly3 spin evolution coupled to AGN feedback prescription in a (16 Mpc)3 volume, simulated down to z = 0.25 at a maximum spatial resolution of 34 pc; the Bustamante and Springel (2019) simulation suite, on-the-fly spin evolution implemented in the moving-mesh code AREPO (Springel, 2010), with a cosmological volume of (∼37Mpc)3 and a spatial resolution of
In this study, we show how future observing programs targeting statistical samples of SMBH spins and masses can be designed to best discriminate between different growth histories of SMBHs. We choose to focus on the Horizon-AGN cosmological simulation to take advantage of its SMBH statistics delivered over a large simulation volume. Treating the simulation suite as a case study, we determine sample sizes and measurement precisions required to differentiate between accretion- and merger-dominated SMBH growth. We then discuss these requirements in the context of the High-Energy X-ray Probe (HEX-P; Madsen et al. 2023)–a probe-class mission concept which offers sensitive broad-band X-ray coverage (0.2–80 keV) with exceptional spectral, timing and angular capabilities, featuring a High Energy Telescope (HET) that focuses hard X-rays, and a low energy telescope (LET) that focuses low-energy X-rays. Taking into account the HEX-P instrument design, we demonstrate the potential for this mission to deliver SMBH spin parameter measurements sufficient to constrain SMBH growth scenarios.
In Section 2 we discuss the challenges associated with spin modelling in cosmological hydrodynamical simulations and briefly describe the Horizon-AGN suite. Section 3 provides an overview of reflection spectroscopy as a tool for measuring a*, followed by a discussion on current constraints and their comparison with the Horizon-AGN cosmological model in Section 4. Section 5 motivates a systematic study of the MBH − a* plane with future observing programs, and Section 6 describes a sample of AGN selected from the BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey appropriate for such a study. In Section 7 we determine minimum sample requirements for differentiating between accretion- and merger-dominated SMBH growth, followed by HEX-P spin parameter recovery simulations in Section 8. In Section 9 we demonstrate the potential for HEX-P to characterize SMBH growth histories through population spin measurements and present our final remarks in Section 10.
2 SMBH spin in cosmological hydrodynamical simulations
Tracing the change in SMBH spin in the context of large-scale evolution of the Universe is a complex problem spanning a broad range of spatial and temporal scales. Transfer of angular momentum via accretion in disks occurs on size scales between
There currently exist three cosmological hydrodynamical simulations which either model spin on-the-fly (Bustamante and Springel, 2019; Dubois et al., 2021) or calculate its evolution in post-processing (Dubois et al., 2014b) (see Section 1). Although these three studies differ significantly in their subgrid prescriptions, in addition to spanning different cosmological volumes and final simulation redshifts, they all deliver SMBH spin distributions broadly consistent with the currently available observational constraints. As spin modelling in a full cosmological context is still in its infancy, the agreement between both models themselves and with the observable Universe is likely to improve once better constraints are available for subgrid parameter tuning. Thus, the study presented here does not focus on differentiating among currently available models, but rather on demonstrating the capability of HEX-P to identify different SMBH growth channels within a single realization of a sophisticated full-physics model of the Universe.
2.1 Horizon-AGN cosmological model
In our study we make use of the Horizon-AGN cosmological simulation (Dubois et al., 2014a), post-processed to trace SMBH spin evolution in response to local hydrodynamics of gas, accretion and SMBH mergers (Dubois et al., 2014b). Our choice of the simulation suite is motivated by its large volume of (∼100 cMpc)3, generous statistics and great success in reproducing realistic SMBH and galaxy samples across cosmic time (Dubois et al., 2016; Volonteri et al., 2016; Beckmann et al., 2017; Kaviraj et al., 2017). Most importantly, however, accretion-dominated and accretion + merger growth histories of SMBHs in Horizon-AGN have been shown to result in distinct spin parameter distributions (Beckmann et al., 2023), hence the suite offers a promising opportunity for studying the SMBH growth signal with HEX-P reflection spectroscopy. The full Horizon-AGN suite, including its spin parameter evolution model, are described in detail in Dubois et al. (2014a) and Dubois et al. (2014b); here we only provide a brief overview of SMBH treatment in the simulation.
Horizon-AGN is a suite of cosmological, hydrodynamical simulations performed with the RAMSES code (Teyssier, 2002) for ΛCDM cosmology with cosmological parameter values based on WMAP-7 observations (H0 = 70.4 kms−1Mpc−1, Ωm = 0.272, Ωb = 0.045, ΩΛ = 0.728 and σ8 = 0.81; Komatsu et al., 2011). The hydrodynamics are computed on an adaptively refined Cartesian grid coupled to subgrid prescriptions for baryonic interactions, including gas cooling, star formation, black hole accretion and feedback processes described in detail in Dubois et al. (2014a). The simulation only includes black holes of the supermassive kind, seeding them in z > 1.5 gas cells once these exceed a star formation threshold of n0 = 0.1H cm−1 in density. Once seeded, the SMBHs then accrete via a boosted Bondi-Hoyle-Lyttleton prescription (
3 Observations of black holes
Astrophysical black holes are unique objects of great interest as they represent the ultimate test of General Relativity as a theory for gravity. Despite their exotic phenomenology, black holes are also objects of outstanding simplicity; owing to the no-hair theorem (Israel, 1967; Israel, 1968; Carter, 1971), they are fully described by only three physical quantities: mass, angular momentum (or spin), and electric charge. Furthermore, charge is quickly neutralized in any realistic astrophysical environment (Michel, 1972; Wald, 1984; Novikov and Frolov, 1989; Treves and Turolla, 1999; Bambi, 2017), leaving just mass and spin as the fundamental parameters to be constrained by observations.
3.1 Mass
Of the two properties describing a black hole, mass is likely the most straightforward to measure (both for stellar mass black holes and SMBHs). Indeed, a range of techniques has now been developed for SMBH mass estimation, appropriate for both local and distant sources. For a relatively nearby system (such as the SMBH in the center of our Galaxy), it is possible to resolve the motion of individual stars and model the underlying gravitational potential to estimate its associated black hole mass (e.g., Ghez et al., 1998; Ghez et al., 2008; Genzel et al., 2010; Gravity Collaboration et al., 2018). Owing to extremely high resolution requirements, such studies can only be undertaken within the Milky Way, while extragalactic MBH measurements are instead forced to rely on stellar, gas and maser kinematics (e.g., Kormendy et al., 1998; Magorrian et al., 1998; Gebhardt et al., 2000).
One of the most robust methods for measuring MBH for active SMBHs in other galaxies involves reverberation mapping of broad emission lines (Blandford and McKee, 1982; Peterson, 1993). In this approach, the velocity dispersion of gas in the broad line region (BLR) is combined with a measurement of the time delay between variations in the continuum and the line emission to infer the dynamics of the accretion disks (see, e.g., Peterson et al., 2004, for a description of the methodology). The mass estimate relies on the proportionality5 MBH ∝ RBLR(ΔV)2 between SMBH mass, the line-of-sight velocity of BLR gas (ΔV, encoded in emission line profiles) and the distance between the black hole and the BLR (RBLR, inferred from the time lag measurement). Since observations of this kind require monitoring over long times at prime facilities, the current sample of SMBH masses measured via reverberation contains only
Because of the limited number of direct SMBH mass measurements, statistical studies commonly rely on empirical calibrations to estimate MBH. A common alternative to the expensive reverberation mapping observations combines continuum luminosity measurements and BLR emission line width to estimate MBH. Known as the “single-epoch virial BH mass estimator”, the method relies on a tight relation between continuum (or line) luminosity and RBLR observed among the reverberation mapping targets, providing a calibrated estimator without the need for a time-lag measurement in each source (see Shen, 2013, for an in-depth review of the method and its limitations). Owing to a broad similarity in continuum and emission line strength among quasars, this method has been successfully applied in estimating MBH in various quasar samples at both low and high redshift, using observations in X-ray, rest-frame UV and optical wavelengths (e.g., Vestergaard, 2002; Greene and Ho, 2005; Wang et al., 2009; Trakhtenbrot and Netzer, 2012).
Absent necessary nuclear emission lines, another common flavor of empirical calibrations makes use of the measured properties of SMBH galactic hosts to estimate their mass. Among these, the relationship between stellar velocity dispersion in the galactic bulge and SMBH mass measured via reverberation mapping, the MBH − σ* relation, boasts the least scatter, yielding a systematic uncertainty of
3.2 Spin
The estimation of black hole spin, on the other hand, is a more difficult task as it mainly impacts the environment extremely close to the black hole. For example, the black hole’s angular momentum determines the radius of the innermost stable circular orbit, ISCO (RISCO, which varies from 9 RG for a maximal retrograde spin to ∼1.2 RG for a maximal prograde spin of a* = 0.998, where RG = GMBH/c2 is the gravitational radius; Bardeen et al., 1972; Thorne, 1974). In principle, the spin of a black hole can be constrained through a variety of methods, most of which involve determining RISCO, but for AGN the most reliable method currently available comes via characterization of relativistic reflection from the innermost accretion disk (sometimes referred to as the iron-line method; see Reynolds 2021for a recent review).
For moderately high accretion rates, most of the infalling material is expected to flow through a thin, optically-thick accretion disk (Shakura and Sunyaev, 1973). Some of the thermal emission from the disk, which peaks in the UV for most AGN, is Compton up-scattered into a much higher energy continuum by a “corona” of hot electrons (kTe ∼ 100 keV; Fabian et al., 2015; Baloković et al., 2020), which is the primary source of X-ray emission in AGN6. This X-ray emission re-irradiates the surface of the disk, producing a further “reflected” emission component that contains a diverse range of atomic spectral features both in emission and absorption. Among these, the inner-shell transitions from Fe ions—predominantly the Kα emission line at 6.4–6.97 keV (depending on the ionization state)—together with a strong absorption K-edge around 7–8 keV, are typically the most prominent. Additionally, reflection spectra exhibit a characteristic high-energy continuum, peaking at ∼30 keV, often referred to as the “Compton hump” (George and Fabian, 1991; Ross and Fabian, 2005; García and Kallman, 2010). Although the emission lines are narrow in the frame of the disk, by the time the material in the disk approaches the ISCO it is orbiting at relativistic speeds, and the gravitational redshift is also very strong. The combination of these effects serves to broaden and skew the emission lines from our perspective as a distant, external observer, resulting in a characteristic “diskline” emission profile (Fabian et al., 1989; Laor, 1991; Brenneman and Reynolds, 2006; Dauser et al., 2010; see Figure 1). Provided that the disk extends all the way into the ISCO orbit, also expected at moderately high accretion rates, then characterizing the relativistic blurring gives a measurement of RISCO, and thus of a*. These distortions are most often discussed in the context of the iron emission line specifically, as it is typically the strongest spectroscopically isolated emission line in the reflection spectrum. While the iron emission provides the cleanest view of the broadened line profile, these relativistic effects impact the whole reflection spectrum (see Figure 1).
Figure 1. (A): The broadening experienced by a narrow emission line from an accretion disk around a black hole (from Fabian et al., 2000). The top three panels show the effects of Newtonian gravity, Special Relativity and General Relativity, respectively, on the line profiles for two example radii within the disk, while the bottom panel shows the broadened and skewed “diskline” profile expected when these combined effects are integrated over the full radial profile of the disk. (B): An example of these relativistic effects applied to a typical reflection spectrum from moderately ionized material (as may be expected for the accretion disk in an AGN). Here we use the xillver reflection model for the rest-frame reflection spectrum (dotted line; García and Kallman, 2010) and apply the relativistic blurring with the relconv model (solid line; Dauser et al., 2010).
This approach to measuring spin is particularly powerful as it can be applied to black holes of all masses, not just the SMBHs powering AGN (e.g., Walton et al., 2012). Indeed, relativistically broadened Fe K lines have been observed in the spectra of a large fraction of AGN with high signal-to-noise (S/N) X-ray spectra (e.g., Tanaka et al., 1995; Miniutti et al., 2007; Fabian et al., 2009; de La Calle Pérez et al., 2010; Brenneman et al., 2011; Gallo et al., 2011; Nardini et al., 2011; Parker et al., 2014; Ricci et al., 2014; Wilkins et al., 2015; Jiang et al., 2018; Walton et al., 2019) as well as most well-studied black hole X-ray binaries (e.g., Miniutti et al., 2004; Miller et al., 2009; Reis et al., 2009; Duro et al., 2011; King et al., 2014; García et al., 2015; Walton et al., 2017; Xu et al., 2018; Kara et al., 2019; Tao et al., 2019; Jiang et al., 2022; Draghis et al., 2023; see also Connors et al. (2023) for additional discussion of black hole X-ray binary studies with HEX-P). Broadband X-ray spectroscopy is particularly critical for properly characterizing the reflected emission: its key features span the entire observable X-ray band (a diverse set of emission lines from lighter elements at energies ≲ 2 keV, the iron emission line at ∼6–7 keV and the Compton hump at ∼30 keV) and their proper modelling requires an accurate characterization of the continuum across the entire broadband range. The NuSTAR era has therefore marked a period of exciting progress in this field, finally providing high S/N spectroscopy up to ∼80 keV for AGN. NuSTAR observations have unambiguously revealed the high-energy reflected continuum associated with the broad iron emission, and have been particularly powerful when paired with simultaneous lower-energy coverage from, e.g., XMM-Newton, confirming our ability to measure spin via reflection spectroscopy (e.g., Risaliti et al., 2013; Marinucci et al., 2014; Walton et al., 2014; Buisson et al., 2018; García et al., 2019; Chamani et al., 2020; Wilkins et al., 2022). As we further show in Section 4, however, these currently available samples are still insufficient to characterize modelled SMBH growth histories in the observable Universe.
4 Current constraints: The spin–mass plane
The most recent systematic compilations of SMBH spins and masses from the literature are presented in Reynolds (2021) and Bambi et al. (2021). In addition, there have been a few more measurements made since the publication of these reviews (Walton et al., 2021; Mallick et al., 2022; Sisk-Reynés et al., 2022), resulting in a current sample size of 46 SMBHs with at least initial spin constraints. All but three of these sources are from the local Universe (z ≤ 0.30, and even then most have z ≤ 0.10); the two highest redshift constraints to date come from strongly-lensed quasars (z = 0.66 and z = 1.70; Reis et al., 2014; Reynolds et al., 2014).
Figure 2 shows the current constraints in the spin-mass plane for SMBHs with masses above 106 M⊙, compared against two distinct SMBH populations in the Horizon-AGN cosmological simulation. Grey filled diamonds indicate measurements with 1σ error bars7, while open diamonds mark lower limits on a*. Many of the measurements show evidence for rapidly rotating black holes, particularly for masses in the range MBH ∼ 106–107 M⊙. There are hints in the current data of trends towards lower spins, or at least an increase in the spread of spin measurements, at higher masses, particularly for MBH > 108 M⊙.
Figure 2. Current observational constraints in the MBH − a* plane (open and filled gray diamonds), compared against the locus occupied by the Horizon-AGN cosmological simulation (logarithmically spaced contours) for black holes with MBH ≥ 106 M⊙ (the range covered by Horizon-AGN). Error bars associated with filled diamonds indicate 1σ uncertainty on a* measurement. Blue, hatched: SMBHs which acquired less than 10% of their mass in mergers (i.e., accretion-only growth), orange: SMBHs with
In order to better capture these trends, we further calculate mean spin parameter values in three bins of SMBH mass between 106 and 1010 M⊙8, marked with open black squares. In the mean calculation we treat all available constraints as uncensored measurements and hence arrive at lower limit estimates in each bin, which indicate a tentative decrease in a* with increasing MBH. We note, however, that there are still only a few measurements in the high-mass regime, and the uncertainties on those are also large. Furthermore, although a few sample-based efforts to constrain SMBH spin via systematic relativistic reflection analyses exist (e.g., Walton et al., 2013; Mallick et al., 2022), the majority of these measurements come from independent analyses of individual sources. As such, they are heterogeneous in regard to the reflection and relativistic blurring models used, the precise assumptions adopted in the use of these models, and the energy range over which the analysis has been performed. Moreover, NuSTAR has only contributed to ∼half of these measurements, so not all are based on high S/N broadband X-ray spectroscopy.
The blue and orange shaded regions in Figure 2 indicate regions of the spin-mass parameter plane occupied by different SMBH growth histories in the Horizon-AGN cosmological simulation, described further in Section 4.1. To enable a fair comparison with current measurement constraints, both simulated SMBH populations have been corrected to best account for biases present in the observations. Among these, a potential likely bias towards high a* values resulting from the expected spin-dependence of the radiative efficiency (η(a*)) in a relativistic thin-disk solution (Novikov and Thorne, 1973) is frequently discussed in the literature as at least part of the reason for the observed prevalence of near-maximal spin values (e.g., Brenneman et al., 2011; Reynolds et al., 2012). Under the simplifying assumption of a uniform distribution of AGN in the local Universe, the probability of observing a given spin value a* scales with η(a*) to power
Figure 3 shows the change in radiative efficiency with spin in geometrically thin relativistic disks (left panel) together with the potential impact the η − a* bias can have on the observed spin parameter distributions (two panels on the right). Using a uniform distribution of a* ∼ U(0, 0.998) and a normal distribution a* ∼ N(0.5, 0.15) as examples, the two panels on the right demonstrate how a probability density function (PDF) of the expected measurements is distorted towards high spin values, shifting the expected mean observed spin values towards a* ≈ 0.67 and a* ≈ 0.54 for the two respective input distributions. As demonstrated in the figure, the impact of the η − a* bias is critically dependent on the underlying true spin parameter distribution. Therefore, the strength of this effect will differ from our test cases for realistic samples of AGN observations.
Figure 3. (A): Efficiency η(a) as a function of spin parameter a for a thin disk solution (Novikov and Thorne, 1973). (B): The effect of spin-dependence of η on the measurement spin population statistics, illustrated with changes to the probability density function (PDF, shaded regions) and its associated mean spin parameter value (vertical lines). Grey hatched regions in the middle and rightmost panels correspond to “raw” PDFs for a uniform distribution a* ∼ U(0, 0.998) and a normal distribution centered on a* = 0.5 with σ = 0.15, respectively, while their colored counterparts to PDFs corrected for the η − a* bias. The shift between dashed and solid vertical lines indicates the change in associated mean a* value between raw (dashed) and η-bias corrected distributions (solid). The magnitude of bias critically depends on the true underlying spin parameter PDF.
Finally, we also note that radiative efficiency estimation for individual sources is challenging in practice. In the case of SMBH populations, however, one can obtain meaningful constraints on typical η(a*) by comparing energy density of AGN radiation with local MBH density (e.g., Soltan, 1982; Fabian and Iwasawa, 1999; Marconi et al., 2004; Raimundo et al., 2012). Most recent studies indicate η(a*) ∼ 0.12–0.20, hence favoring spinning SMBH populations and implying a* ≳ 0.5 (Shankar et al., 2020).
4.1 Connecting to SMBH growth histories in Horizon-AGN
As discussed in Section 2, different modes of SMBH growth leave distinct imprints on their angular momenta. Hence, once integrated over the lifetime of individual black holes, different SMBH growth histories, e.g., accretion-vs. merger-dominated scenarios, yield distinguishable distributions of their spin parameter a*. Beckmann et al. (2023) (hereafter B23) study such signatures in the z = 0.0556 snapshot of the Horizon-AGN cosmological simulation, finding that black holes grown exclusively via accretion (nearly merger-free) have a spin distribution that is distinct from the rest of the black hole population at
To extract predictions for the observable signatures of different SMBH growth histories in the spin-mass plane from Horizon-AGN, we first identify the loci occupied by each history in the MBH − a* parameter space. From here onwards we focus on the z = 0.0556 snapshot of the simulation studied in B23, which is well suited for our intended target sample of local AGN (see Section 6.1). Inspired by B23, we use a threshold on fBH, merge, the fraction of mass acquired in mergers, to identify the accretion-only and accretion + mergers growth channels. We adopt fBH, merge < 0.1 for accretion-only and fBH, merge ≥ 0.1 for accretion + mergers, which yield populations of 2,137 and 4,714 black holes respectively. Since the accretion-only population in the simulation is limited to MBH < 108.5 M⊙, to showcase its spin predictions across the entire mass range in Figure 2, we extend the dataset over the missing MBH range with random draws from the accretion-only a* probability density function (PDF). More specifically, we calculate the accretion-only PDF for MBH > 108 M⊙ and take random draws from it to generate MBH − a* value pairs with MBH distribution matching that of the accretion + mergers population above 108 M⊙. In this way we mimic the effect of switching off spin evolution due to merger events studied for the z = 0 snapshot in Dubois et al. (2014b) (see Figure 7 in that publication), arriving at an expected a* measurement across the whole range in MBH for the accretion-only growth channel. We note that although the Eddington-limited subgrid model for SMBH growth in Horizon-AGN does not produce merger-free populations at very high MBH, one could still expect highly spinning black holes at the high-mass end from models which include super-Eddington accretion rates in cosmological hydrodynamical simulations (e.g., Massonneau et al., 2023)9.
Figure 2 compares loci in the MBH − a* plane occupied by black holes with accretion-only (blue hatched contours) and accretion + mergers (orange filled contours) growth histories in Horizon-AGN. Current observational constraints for MBH > 106 M⊙ are shown as individual grey points, with open diamonds corresponding to lower limits and filled diamonds representing measurements and their corresponding 1σ uncertainties. To ensure a meaningful comparison between observations and the cosmological simulation, both of the 2D spin distributions extracted from Horizon-AGN are corrected for the η(a*) − a* bias and hence are vertically shifted upwards with respect to the raw output of the simulation. Figure 2 clearly demonstrates that the two SMBH growth scenarios yield different signatures in the spin–mass parameter space. At MBH ≳ 108 M⊙ the two growth histories begin separating, with mergers pushing the expected spin parameter values down towards values as low as a* ∼ 0.6 with increasing MBH, while the accretion-only scenario remains concentrated at near-maximal spin values. For black hole masses
5 The need for a systematic study of the spin–mass plane
Another critical conclusion drawn from Figure 2 is the necessity of obtaining high-precision spin measurements for large statistical samples of local AGN. Although the current observational constraints are broadly consistent with the accretion + mergers growth channel and show a hint of decrease in a* with MBH above 108 M⊙, the limited number of measurements at these masses and the relatively poor precision of these measurements mean the current data are not sufficient for a statistical assessment of these trends. More importantly for our discussion, the current sample of 10 measurements and 23 upper limits presented in the figure is not capable of differentiating between the two signatures of SMBH growth histories predicted by Horizon-AGN.
The current state-of-the-art spin measurements also offer a rather limited opportunity for the validation and improvement of the SMBH spin evolution models used in cosmological simulations of SMBH growth. When compared against other hydrodynamical simulations which cover a similar range in MBH (e.g., Bustamante and Springel, 2019), Horizon-AGN produces spin population statistics with only subtle differences in their MBH − a* loci. In general this is encouraging, as it suggests that the qualitative trends implied by these simulations (i.e., Figure 2) are robust. The discrepancies that do exist between them, however, are a combined result of differences in subgrid prescriptions for SMBH seeding, accretion and feedback, and hence carry important information about the validity of a given numerical approach. With the measurement precision and sample size offered by the current constraints, one cannot determine which model implementation (if any) is a closer approximation of the observable Universe. Consequently, the current constraints allow enough room to validate a range of models, while, at the same time, are not strong enough to serve as observational calibrators for future generations of subgrid cosmological SMBH models.
In summary, Figure 2 demonstrates that a systematic study of the spin-mass plane is necessary for differentiating between different growth histories of SMBHs in the local Universe. A comprehensive characterisation of MBH and a* properties of local AGN will also play a critical role in calibrating subgrid models of cosmological structure formation by delivering improved constraints on physical properties of SMBH. To establish measurement requirements for these survey observations we take the two SMBH growth histories in Horizon-AGN as a case study, and investigate the precision and sample sizes that would be required to differentiate between these two possibilities in realistic samples of observable sources.
6 The BASS sample
In order to assess the number of known AGN for which spin constraints may be possible, either now or in the moderately near future, we turn to the BAT AGN Spectroscopic Survey (BASS; Koss et al., 2017). This is a major multi-wavelength effort to characterise AGN detected in the very high energy X-ray survey conducted by the Burst Alert Telescope (BAT, 14–195 keV; Barthelmy et al., 2005) onboard the Neil Gehrels Swift Observatory (hereafter Swift; Gehrels et al., 2004). The latest 105-month release of the BAT source catalogue (Oh et al., 2018) contains 1,632 sources in total, of which 1,105 have been identified as AGN. BASS provides black hole mass estimates (drawn from a variety of methods including Hβ line widths, stellar velocity dispersions and literature searches10) and Eddington ratios for the majority of these (e.g., Koss et al., 2022), as well as initial constraints on their broadband spectral properties by combining the BAT data with the best soft X-ray coverage available (e.g., from XMM-Newton; Ricci et al., 2017).
6.1 Sources with spin measurement potential
Not all AGN are well suited to making spin measurements. In particular, the very hard X-ray selection of the BAT survey means it is sensitive to even heavily obscured AGN (including “Compton thick” sources with NH > 1.5 × 1024 cm−2; e.g., Arévalo et al., 2014; Annuar et al., 2015), and determining the contribution from relativistic reflection becomes increasingly challenging as the source becomes more obscured. Furthermore, there is a general expectation that at low accretion rates the optically-thick accretion disk becomes truncated at radii larger than the ISCO (Narayan and Yi, 1994; Esin et al., 1997; Tomsick et al., 2009), such that the inner radius of the disk no longer provides direct information about the spin. As such, in order to compile a sample of AGN for which spin measurements should be possible, we apply several selection criteria to the BASS sample. First, we select sources with fairly low levels of obscuration, requiring a neutral column density of NH ≤ 1022 cm−2. Second, we select sources with Eddington ratios of λ = Lbol/LEdd ≥ 0.01, so that we may have confidence that the accretion disk should extend to the ISCO (note also that this selection naturally means a black hole mass estimate is available, otherwise it would not have been possible to estimate λ). We further place an upper limit of λ < 0.7 to select sources for which thin disk approximation is appropriate (e.g., Steiner et al., 2010). We also require that the sources exhibit sufficiently strong reflection features in order for spin measurements to be feasible. We therefore then select sources for which the initial X-ray spectroscopy conducted by Ricci et al. (2017) indicates a reflection fraction consistent with R ≥ 1 (note that Ricci et al., 2017 use the definition of the reflection fraction from Magdziarz and Zdziarski, 1995). For the same reason, we also exclude blazars from our sample. Finally, after having made these cuts to the BASS data, we also exclude a small number of remaining sources for which the initial X-ray spectroscopy implies an unreasonably hard photon index (Γ ≤ 1.5), taking this as an indication that either the source is actually obscured but that the absorption is sufficiently complex that it was not well characterized by the simple spectral models used in Ricci et al. (2017) or that the spectrum has a low signal-to-noise ratio.
We do not expect these selections to introduce any significant biases that would cause the observed spin distribution to deviate from the intrinsic one (besides the η − a* bias that has already been discussed in Section 4). Selecting based on obscuration properties and the exclusion of blazars are both expected to be related mainly to our viewing angle to these AGN (e.g., Antonucci, 1993), which is not dependent on the spin of their central SMBHs. The Eddington ratio selection relates specifically to the accretion rate onto the AGN “today”, while the spin of the SMBH will be mainly determined by its long-term growth history instead. Indeed, the Horizon-AGN simulation shows no connection between SMBH spin and the instantaneous accretion rate in the analysed snapshot. Finally, the reflection fraction selection still permits spins across the full range of possible prograde spin values (a* = 0–0.998), as even Schwarzschild black holes (a* = 0) should result in reflection from the disc with R ≥ 1 if the disc reaches the ISCO (e.g., Dauser et al., 2016).
Our various cuts leave a sample of 192 AGN from BASS for which spin measurements should be possible. All of these sources are relatively local, with a median redshift of z ∼ 0.05 (see “BASS parent” in the right panel of Figure 4), consistent with the z = 0.0556 snapshot of the Horizon-AGN simulation we use in this work. Conveniently, these sources all have an estimate of MBH, among which
Figure 4. (A): comparison of SMBH mass distributions between our parent BASS sample (BASS parent, Section 6.1 and the Horizon-AGN cosmological simulation, demonstrating good agreement between potential AGN targets and the cosmological model. (B): MBH comparison between the whole BASS catalogue (BASS DR2) and out parent BASS sample. The distributions in MBH are comparable, demonstrating that our sample selection criteria do not introduce additional bias with respect to the full BASS DR2 catalogue. (C): comparison of redshift distributions between our parent BASS sample and the full BASS DR2 AGN catalogue sources. As expected, our sample selection removes the highest-redshift sources. However, the median redshift remains comparable at z = 0.05.
7 Sample size and spin uncertainty requirements
In order to design observational strategies for differentiating between SMBH growth scenarios with spin parameter measurements, we need to establish the sample size and maximum spin measurement uncertainty (
7.1 Simulating realistic samples informed by Horizon-AGN
Figure 2 shows that the two SMBH growth scenarios separate in the MBH − a* plane above 108 M⊙, with the strongest difference at the high-MBH end. It is also apparent that at high masses the accretion + mergers distribution (orange) spans a broad range in spin parameter values. Therefore, in order to differentiate between the two growth scenarios with realistic samples, we base our strategy on a simple statistical approach—discretising the spin–mass plane by calculating sample means in bins of MBH. This way we can both reduce the impact of the uncertainty on individual MBH − a* measurements and coarsely capture the two-dimensional trends which would otherwise require large sample sizes for a direct comparison between 2D distributions. To best capture the signal we select one bin below MBH = 108 M⊙ (where both scenarios make consistent predictions) and for higher masses we split the sample into two bins above and below log (MBH/M⊙) = 8.7 (MBH ≈ 5 × 108 M⊙). This choice is motivated by the SMBH mass distribution shown in the left panel of Figure 4; there are 9 AGN with log(MBH/M⊙) > 8.7 among the brightest 100 X-ray sources in the 2–10 keV band in our parent BASS selection (which we consider as an initial plausible sample size), which yield a Poisson signal-to-noise ratio of 3 for source number count in the highest mass bin. On the low-mass end we restrict the mass bin to MBH > 106 M⊙ to match the Horizon-AGN MBH distribution. Our final binning scheme results in the following ranges in log(MBH/M⊙) [6.0, 8.0] [8.0, 8.7] and [8.7, 10.0].
By estimating mean a* values, we take advantage of the
To simulate realistic samples of AGN, we take a total of K = ∑Ki random draws from the bias-corrected spin distributions across all MBH bins, with the sample sizes Ki in each individual bin determined by the number of BASS sources which fall within this SMBH mass range11, among the K brightest AGN from our selection in Section 6.1. We perform the spin draws separately for each SMBH growth model, and hence for each realization of a potential observational sample of a total of K AGN, we have a paired set of predicted spin values for the accretion-only and accretion + mergers growth models. To simulate the effect of measurement uncertainty we then perturb the spin values drawn above by further random draws from a normal distribution
As a final step in each simulated AGN sample, for each mass bin we calculate the mean spin value together with its corresponding standard error on the mean: μacc ± δacc for the accretion-only scenario and μacc+mer ± δacc+mer for accretion + mergers. To calculate the standard error, we necessarily assume that each paired draw consists of a* measurements without lower limits in both SMBH growth histories. However, we note that some lower limits are likely to be present in real observations. Finally, we check the probability of the two mean measurements in a mass bin Ω being drawn from the same underlying distribution by calculating the right-tail p-value (pΩ) of μacc − μacc+mer belonging to
Figure 5 shows the fraction of these simulated AGN samples which result in a statistically different measurement of mean spin parameter value between the accretion-only and accretion + mergers SMBH growth scenarios as a function of a* measurement uncertainty and sample size. In order to take full advantage of the difference between the two predictions at high SMBH masses, in each realization of a potential AGN sample we combine the results for both of the mass bins with MBH > 108 M⊙. Since these can be treated as independent measurements, the combined probability of the simulated accretion-only and accretion + mergers samples being drawn from the same distribution in the MBH − a* plane for both mass bins becomes ptotal = p[8,8.7] × p[8.7,10]. The vertical axis in Figure 5 shows the fraction of simulated measurements which result in ptotal < 0.01 as a function of
Figure 5. Minimum spin measurement uncertainty
As expected, Figure 5 shows that increasing the uncertainty on individual spin measurements at fixed sample size decreases the fraction of simulated samples capable of differentiating between the two SMBH growth histories. Similarly, at fixed uncertainty, a larger sample size results in higher chances for a single realization of such a sample to tell the two growth histories apart. In the context of minimum survey requirements, we find that for a sample size of
8 HEX-P simulations
Given the importance of simultaneous broadband X-ray spectroscopy for providing observational constraints on SMBH spin, a mission with the profile of HEX-P is ideally suited to building the significant samples of SMBH spin measurements required to finally connect these measurements to cosmological BH growth models. We now present a set of simulations that showcase the anticipated capabilities of HEX-P in this regard.
8.1 Mission design
The Low Energy Telescope (LET) onboard HEX-P consists of a segmented mirror assembly coated with Ir on monocrystalline silicon that achieves a half power diameter of 3.5″, and a low-energy DEPFET detector, of the same type as the Wide Field Imager (WFI; Meidinger et al., 2020) onboard Athena (Nandra et al., 2013). It has 512 × 512 pixels that cover a field of view of 11.3′× 11.3′. It has an effective passband of 0.2–20 keV, and a full frame readout time of 2 ms, which can be operated in a 128 and 64 channel window mode for higher count-rates to mitigate pile-up by allowing a faster readout. Pile-up effects remain below an acceptable limit of ∼1% for fluxes up to ∼100 mCrab in the smallest window configuration (64w). Excising the core of the PSF, a common practice in X-ray astronomy, allows for observations of brighter sources, with a typical loss of up to ∼60% of the total photon counts.
The High Energy Telescope (HET) consists of two co-aligned telescopes and detector modules. The optics are made of Ni-electroformed full shell mirror substrates, leveraging the heritage of XMM-Newton, and coated with Pt/C and W/Si multilayers for an effective passband of 2–80 keV. The high-energy detectors are of the same type as flown on NuSTAR, and they consist of 16 CZT sensors per focal plane, tiled 4 × 4, for a total of 128 × 128 pixel spanning a field of view of 13.4′× 13.4′.
8.2 Instrumental responses
All the mission simulations presented here were produced with a set of response files that represent the observatory performance based on current best estimates as of spring 2023 (see Madsen et al. 2023). The effective area is derived from raytracing calculations for the mirror design including obscuration by all known structures. The detector responses are based on simulations performed by the respective hardware groups, with an optical blocking filter for the LET and a Be window and thermal insulation for the HET. The LET background was derived from a GEANT4 simulation (Eraerds et al., 2021) of the WFI instrument, and the background simulation for the HET was derived from a GEANT4 simulation of the NuSTAR instrument. Both simulations adopt the planned L1 orbit of HEX-P. The broad X-ray passband and superior sensitivity will provide a unique opportunity to study accretion onto SMBHs across a wide range of energies, luminosities, and dynamical regimes.
8.3 Spectral simulations
To assess the ability of HEX-P to constrain black hole growth models via AGN spin measurements, we perform a series of spectral simulations covering a range of spin values relevant to the cosmological simulations discussed above: a* = 0.5, 0.7, 0.9, 0.95. We first focus on the lowest spin value among this set, a* = 0.5, and perform a set of simulations at different exposures in the range 50–200 ks. For each exposure, we simulate 100 different spectra using the above response files and the xspec spectral fitting package (v12.11.1; Arnaud, 1996) in order to determine the minimum exposure that provides the HEX-P data quality needed for an average 1σ constraint on the spin of
We make use of the relxill family of disk reflection models (Dauser et al., 2014; García et al., 2014) for these simulations, and construct a spectral model that draws on the typical properties of the 192 BASS AGN selected above (Section 6.1), general expectations for the unobscured AGN selected based on the unified model for AGN, and typical results seen from AGN for which detailed reflection studies have already been possible in the literature. We specifically make use of the relxilllpcp model, which assumes a simple lamppost geometry for the corona, and that the ionizing continuum is a thermal Comptonization model (specifically the nthcomp model; Zdziarski et al., 1996; Zycki et al., 1999).
For the key model parameters, we assume the spectrum of the primary continuum has parameters Γ = 2.0 and kTe = 100 keV for the photon index and electron temperature, respectively, relatively typical parameters for unobscured AGN (Ricci et al., 2017; Baloković et al., 2020). This illuminates a geometrically thin accretion disk which is assumed to extend down to the ISCO. AGN with moderate-to-low levels of obscuration are generally expected to be viewed at moderate-to-low inclinations in the unified model (Antonucci, 1993), so we assume an inclination of 45°. The disk is assumed to be ionized, with an ionization parameter13 of log[ξ/(erg cm s)] = 2 (typical of values reported from relativistic reflection analyses in the literature, e.g., Ballantyne et al., 2011; Walton et al., 2013; Jiang et al., 2019; Mallick et al., 2022), and to have solar iron abundance (i.e., AFe = 1). We assume the corona has a height of h = 5 RG for the a* = 0.5 simulations, and then that it has constant height in vertical horizon units as we subsequently vary the spin. This is equivalent to assuming the scale of the corona contracts slightly as the inner radius of the disk moves inwards, as might be expected should the corona be related to magnetic re-connection around the inner disk (e.g., Merloni and Fabian, 2001); in gravitational radii, these coronal heights correspond to values in the range ∼4–5 RG, which are relatively standard values inferred for the sizes of X-ray coronae (e.g., De Marco et al., 2013; Reis and Miller, 2013; Kara et al., 2016; Mallick et al., 2021). The reflection fraction is calculated self-consistently based on the combination of a* and h, both when computing the simulations and also when subsequently fitting the simulated data to explore constraints on a*.
As we need a sample of ∼100 AGN to distinguish the black hole growth models, we normalize all of our simulations to have a 2–10 keV flux of 6 × 10−12 erg cm−2 s−1, corresponding to the flux of the 100th brightest source in the sample of AGN selected above (see Section 6.1). At this flux level, we find that a HEX-P exposure of 150 ks is required to provide an average uncertainty of
Figure 6. Spin parameter measurement uncertainty σ(a*) vs. spin parameter a*, extracted from the HEX-P spectral simulations of relativistic reflection in AGN discussed in Section 8.3 (which assume a 2–10 keV flux of 6 × 10−12 erg cm−2 s−1 and an exposure time of 150 ks).
Figure 7. (A): Count spectra for the LET (red) and the HET (black) for one of our HEX-P spectral simulations with a* = 0.9, along with their corresponding instrumental backgrounds (shaded regions). (B): The same simulated spectra plotted as a ratio to a simple cutoffpl continuum model (a powerlaw with an exponential high-energy cutoff), fit to the 2–4, 8–10 and 50–80 keV bands (where the primary continuum would be expected to dominate). We zoom in on the data above 2 keV to highlight the key reflection features: the relativistically broadened Fe Kα peaking at ∼6–7 keV and the Compton hump peaking at ∼30 keV. The two insets show the projected constraints on a*, h and source inclination i for this simulation (displayed as 2-D confidence contours, with the 1σ and 2σ levels shown).
9 Constraining SMBH growth channels with HEX-P
Having established the minimum survey requirements, we now demonstrate HEX-P′s ability to differentiate between accretion-only and accretion + mergers SMBH growth scenarios. To this end we repeat the simulations introduced in Section 7.1 for the brightest 100 sources in the parent BASS sample (Section 6.1), this time replacing the constant spin parameter uncertainty
Figure 8 illustrates the observational constraints that would be expected for one such paired set of simulated AGN samples, randomly selected from our set of simulations, comparing the accretion-only (blue circles) and accretion + mergers (orange squares) SMBH growth scenarios against the current spin parameter constraints for MBH > 106 M⊙ (gray diamonds). In order to account for the existence of lower limits expected in realistic measurements, by analogy with the measurements collected from the literature, we use open symbols to indicate right-censored spin draws, i.e.,
Figure 8. Comparison between current published constraints (grey diamonds) and a random realization of simulated HEX-P measurements for the accretion-only (blue circles) and accretion + mergers SMBH growth scenarios (orange squares). Empty symbols show lower limits on a*, while filled symbols denote measurements with vertical errorbars marking their corresponding 1σ confidence ranges. With its expected spin measurement uncertainty, HEX-P will provide unprecedented constraints on the MBH − a* plane for SMBHs in the local Universe.
Moving on from an individual realization, the top panels in Figure 9 present the distribution of mean a* measurements (μ) for the whole suite of 104 simulations for the accretion + mergers (orange) and accretion-only (blue) SMBH growth histories for the three bins of MBH. Vertical dashed lines mark μ at which each distribution peaks, indicating the most likely expected mean spin parameter measurement for each growth scenario. Similarly, bottom panels present the corresponding distributions of the standard errors on the mean (δ) together with their peaks marked with vertical dashed lines. The mean spin parameter values from Horizon-AGN together with their most likely measurements expected from HEX-P observations are summarized in Table 1.
Figure 9. Summary of mean spin parameter estimates for 104 realisations of simulated HEX-P observing campaigns. (A): distribution of expected mean a* estimates (μ) in bins of MBH for accretion-only (blue) and accretion + mergers (orange) SMBH growth scenarios. (B): corresponding distributions of the standard errors on the mean (δ). Peak locations in each distribution are marked with vertical dashed lines. Differences between the mean spin measurements for the two scenarios become apparent for MBH > 108 M⊙ with the most massive bin showing the strongest signal.
Together, Figure 9 and Table 1 demonstrate the potential of mean a* measurements in bins of MBH for differentiating between the accretion-only and accretion + mergers SMBH growth scenarios within the Horizon-AGN cosmological model. As expected from Figure 2, the simulated constraints in the lowest mass bin are consistent between the two SMBH populations, but become statistically separable for MBH > 108 M⊙. In all three panels in Figure 9, the distributions of mean accretion-only measurements are narrower than the accretion + mergers distributions, with consistently high peak values matching the true η(a*) bias-corrected mean a* in Horizon-AGN to within
In Figure 10 we summarize the prospects for constraining the cosmic growth history of SMBHs via X-ray reflection spectroscopy with a HEX-P spin survey similar to the design outlined above. The figure shows the expected mean a* measurements in three bins of MBH for accretion-only (blue circles) and accretion + mergers (orange squares) scenarios, inferred from our suite of simulated observations of the brightest 100 AGN in our parent BASS sample. The y-axis locus of individual points correspond to the vertical dashed lines in the top panels of Figure 9, while the length of the error bars correspond to the vertical dashed lines in the bottom panels. Since it is likely that observations of high-a* SMBHs will result in a significant fraction of constraints that are lower limits, we mark the prediction for the accretion-only growth scenario as a lower limit. We also compare the results of our simulations to the current constraints, showing mean spin parameter values in identical mass bins for MBH − a* measurements calculated earlier in Section 4.1 (and presented earlier in Figure 2).
Figure 10. Comparison of mean spin parameter measurements in bins of MBH between published constraints (grey diamonds) and expected HEX-P measurements for accretion-only (blue circles) and accretion + mergers (orange squares) SMBH growth scenarios. For HEX-P measurements we show the most likely result from our simulations, corresponding to the vertical dashed lines in Figure 9. Background shading marks our MBH binning scheme, while the gray hatching at the top indicates the spin parameter range forbidden by the Thorne (1974) limit. The expected HEX-P spin parameter measurements will allow us to differentiate between SMBH growth histories, unlike MBH − a* constraints placed until now.
Figure 10 clearly demonstrates that future HEX-P spin measurements will allow us to differentiate between the two SMBH growth channels as inferred from the Horizon-AGN cosmological model. The expected mean measurements in the highest mass bin alone reject the null hypothesis of the accretion-only and accretion + mergers results being drawn from the same distribution at the level of 2.8σ (p[8.7–10.0] = 2.5 × 10−3). Across the whole suite of our simulations,
10 Final remarks
We have shown that a sample of 100 AGN with the data quality determined in Section 7 and the mass distribution of the 100 brightest sources in our BASS selection (Section 6.1) is sufficient to distinguish between different cosmological SMBH growth scenarios. We now assess the level of observational investment from HEX-P that would be required to achieve this result. Given that a 150 ks HEX-P exposure provides the necessary data quality for our required spin constraints (
While this is a significant investment, it is a program that is achievable when spread over the full 5-year lifetime of HEX-P. This unique capability highlights HEX-P’s transformative nature as a next-generation X-ray observatory, allowing it to complete large observing programs otherwise unfeasible with coordinated exposures between separate hard and soft X-ray facilities. Collecting a sample of a 100 SMBH spin parameter measurements from NuSTAR observations combined with a soft X-ray observatory would require no less than 30 years to complete, given a* publication trends since the mission’s launch (see Figure 1 in Madsen et al. 2023). The strictly simultaneous broadband X-ray coverage of HEX-P, critical for SMBH spin parameter recovery, would render a large sample size straightforward to achieve, owing to flexible scheduling absent multi-facility coordination restrictions. In particular, a spin survey such as this could serve a similar function to the HEX-P mission as the ongoing Swift/BAT survey conducted by NuSTAR (e.g., Baloković et al., 2020). This program gradually builds up NuSTAR observations of hard X-ray sources detected by the Swift/BAT detector via regular scheduling of short “filler” observations within the primarily Guest Observer program. Indeed, even the longest exposures required here–150 ks – could be split into 3 × 50 ks observations for ease of scheduling. The regular inclusion of such observations in the schedule allows for increased flexibility to respond to transient phenomena (i.e., target-of-opportunity observations), as these survey observations can easily be rescheduled since they have no real time constraints and the simultaneity of the coverage across the full 0.2–80 keV bandpass is already guaranteed.
Most importantly, our study demonstrates that in the light of theoretical predictions delivered by state-of-the-art cosmological hydrodynamical simulations tracing SMBH spin evolution, only large statistical samples of consistent measurements are capable of isolating SMBH growth channels. Once radiative efficiency-spin bias is accounted for, the differences in statistical properties of SMBH populations in the MBH − a* plane decrease in magnitude, requiring both high precision on individual measurements and numerous AGN observations at MBH > 108 M⊙ to constrain average trends in spin parameter as a function of SMBH mass. Although such measurements are, in principle, possible with currently available instruments, they critically require simultaneous observations with soft and hard X-ray observatories (e.g., XMM-Newton and NuSTAR). The necessary exposure time comparable to the expected HEX-P investment for these observatories renders such a study unfeasible due to the limitations associated with program allocation and scheduling conflicts among individual instruments.
Beyond distinguishing cosmological SMBH growth scenarios via spin measurements, the high-S/N broadband X-ray data generated by such a survey would provide a legacy for the HEX-P mission, and broader studies of AGN in general. For example, inner disk inclinations will be well constrained (see Figure 7), providing further tests of the broad applicability of the Unified Model (Antonucci, 1993) as well as allowing for additional sanity checks of the reflection results/searches for disk warps via comparison of these inclinations with constraints from the outer disk from, e.g., VLT/GRAVITY (see the cases of NGC3783 and IRAS 09149–2461, where the inner and outer disk inclinations from reflectionstudies and GRAVITY are in excellent agreement: Brenneman et al., 2011; Walton et al., 2020; GRAVITY Collaboration et al., 2020; GRAVITY Collaboration et al., 2021). These observations would also provide strong constraints on the X-ray corona for a large sample of AGN, both in terms of its location (see Figure 7) and its plasma physics via temperature measurements; all these observations will allow for important constraints on the electron temperature, facilitating further tests of coronal models (e.g., Fabian et al., 2015; see also Kammoun et al. 2023). All-in-all, while a program of this nature would be a major investment, the scientific return provided would be suitably vast.
Data availability statement
The raw data supporting the conclusions of this article will be made available by the authors, without undue reservation.
Author contributions
JP: Conceptualization, Formal Analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Visualization, Writing–original draft, Writing–review and editing. JG: Conceptualization, Funding acquisition, Investigation, Project administration, Resources, Writing–original draft, Writing–review and editing. DW: Conceptualization, Formal Analysis, Investigation, Methodology, Writing–original draft, Writing–review and editing. RB: Conceptualization, Data curation, Writing–review and editing. DS: Writing–review and editing. DB: Writing–review and editing. DW: Writing–review and editing. SB: Writing–review and editing. PB: Writing–review and editing. JB: Writing–review and editing. C-TC: Writing–review and editing. PC: Writing–review and editing. TD: Writing–review and editing. AF: Writing–review and editing. EK: Writing–review and editing. KM: Writing–review and editing. LM: Writing–review and editing. GiM: Writing–review and editing. GaM: Writing–review and editing. EN: Writing–review and editing. AP: Writing–review and editing. SP: Writing–review and editing. CR: Writing–review and editing. FT: Writing–review and editing. NT-A: Writing–review and editing. K-WW: Writing–review and editing.
Funding
The author(s) declare financial support was received for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article. JP and JG acknowledge support from NASA grants 80NSSC21K1567 and 80NSSC22K1120. The work of DS was carried out at the Jet Propulsion Laboratory, California Institute of Technology, under a contract with NASA. CR acknowledges support from the Fondecyt Regular (grant 1230345) and ANID BASAL (project FB210003). LM acknowledges support from the CITA National Fellowship.
Acknowledgments
We would like to thank the anonymous referees for carefully reading the manuscript and for providing constructive comments which helped improve the quality of the paper. We would also like to acknowledge the journal editor, Renee Ludlam, recognizing her very smooth handling of the peer review process.
Conflict of interest
The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest.
Publisher’s note
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Supplementary material
The Supplementary Material for this article can be found online at: https://www.frontiersin.org/articles/10.3389/fspas.2024.1324796/full#supplementary-material
Footnotes
1Accretion rate associated with Eddington luminosity, LEdd at which outward radiation pressure balances the gravitational force outside a massive body with mass M, given by
2In a prograde disk, the accreting material and the black hole are both rotating in the same direction.
3The term on-the-fly refers to a spin calculation explicitly included at runtime within the simulation, as opposed to in post-processing after the simulation run is completed.
4Capturing physics at scales smaller than those allowed by numerical resolution via semi-analytic prescriptions coupled to quantities directly resolved in the simulation. See Vogelsberger et al. (2020) and Crain and van de Voort (2023) for comprehensive reviews of the methodology.
5The proportionality constant, known as the virial factor, is challenging to determine for individual objects owing to the unknown geometry of the BLR gas (e.g., Brewer et al., 2011; Pancoast et al., 2014).
6The precise nature of the corona is still poorly understood, but is also an area of AGN physics that HEX-P will help uncover (Kammoun et al. 2023).
7Measurements reported in the literature commonly quote 90% confidence intervals for spin parameter measurements. In order to translate these values to 1σ estimates, we divide the confidence interval by a factor of 1.64, making the simplifying assumption that the current constrains follow split normal distributions.
8Our choice of binning scheme is discussed in Section 7.1.
9We also note that efficient SMBH merging is, in part, a consequence of the limitations associated with modelling black hole mergers in cosmological simulations, which do not explicitly follow the SMBH orbital angular momentum loss via dynamical friction.
10The method used to estimate the mass for each source is also provided in the BASS catalogue.
11Throughout the study we treat the three sources with MBH < 106 M⊙ in the parent BASS sample as belonging to the lowest mass bin, given the large uncertainty associated with low MBH estimates.
12Note that at this point we simply assume all spin measurements to have the same uncertainty; more realistic scenarios that include the expected dependence of measurement uncertainties as a function of spin are investigated in Section 9.
13The ionization parameter has its usual definition of ξ = L/nR2, where L is the ionizing luminosity, n is the number density of the plasma, and R is the distance between the plasma and the ionizing source
14The skewness is also present in the accretion-only scenario, however, this effect is less visibly apparent due to the narrow width of the distribution.
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Keywords: supermassive black holes, AGN, black hole growth, black hole spin, future X-ray observatories
Citation: Piotrowska JM, García JA, Walton DJ, Beckmann RS, Stern D, Ballantyne DR, Wilkins DR, Bianchi S, Boorman PG, Buchner J, Chen C-T, Coppi P, Dauser T, Fabian AC, Kammoun E, Madsen K, Mallick L, Matt G, Matzeu G, Nardini E, Pizzetti A, Puccetti S, Ricci C, Tombesi F, Torres-Albà N and Wong K-W (2024) The high energy X-ray probe (HEX-P): constraining supermassive black hole growth with population spin measurements. Front. Astron. Space Sci. 11:1324796. doi: 10.3389/fspas.2024.1324796
Received: 20 October 2023; Accepted: 16 February 2024;
Published: 28 March 2024.
Edited by:
Renee Ludlam, Wayne State University, United StatesReviewed by:
Lijun Gou, Chinese Academy of Sciences (CAS), ChinaEilat Glikman, Middlebury College, United States
Copyright © 2024 Piotrowska, García, Walton, Beckmann, Stern, Ballantyne, Wilkins, Bianchi, Boorman, Buchner, Chen, Coppi, Dauser, Fabian, Kammoun, Madsen, Mallick, Matt, Matzeu, Nardini, Pizzetti, Puccetti, Ricci, Tombesi, Torres-Albà and Wong. This is an open-access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (CC BY). The use, distribution or reproduction in other forums is permitted, provided the original author(s) and the copyright owner(s) are credited and that the original publication in this journal is cited, in accordance with accepted academic practice. No use, distribution or reproduction is permitted which does not comply with these terms.
*Correspondence: J. M. Piotrowska, joannapk@caltech.edu
†CITA National Fellow